xviii CONTENTS. 



(Fidlar), mycotic lymphangitis (Reynolds) .Diseases caused by bacteria. Botryo- 

 mycosis (Reynolds), gonorrhoea (Fidlar). infectious mastitis (Reynolds), Malta 

 fever (Fidlar), staphylococcic infections (Fidlar), streptococcic infections (Fidlar), 

 pneumonia (Fidlar) , anthrax (Harrison) , bacillary white diarrhoea of young chicks 

 (Rettger), chicken cholera (Harrison), chronic bacterial enteritis (Reynolds), con- 

 tagious abortion (MacNeal), diphtheria (Fidlar), dysentery (Fidlar), fowl diphtheria 

 (Harrison), glanders (Reynolds), influenza (Fidlar), hsemorrhagic septicaemia 

 (Reynolds) , leprosy (Fidlar) , plague (Fidlar) , swine erysipelas (Dorset) , tuberculosis 

 (Reynolds), foot rot of sheep (Dorset), foul brood of bees (Harrison), malignant 

 oedema (Fidlar), symptomatic anthrax (Reynolds), tetanus (Fidlar), typhoid fever 

 (Fidlar), Asiatic cholera (Fidlar) .Diseases of unknown cause, (Scarlet fever, 

 measles, German measles, Duke's disease, smallpox, chickenpox, mumps) (Hill), 

 canine distemper (Dorset) , cattle plague (Dorset) , chicken pest (Dorset) , contagious 

 bovine pleuro-pneumonia (Dorset), cowpox (King), horsepox (King), sheeppox 

 (King), dengue (Dorset), foot-and-mouth disease (Dorset), hog cholera (Dorset), 

 horse sickness (Dorset), infantile paralysis (Dorset), louping-ill (Dorset), pellagra 

 (MacNeal), rabies (MacNeal), swamp fever (Reynolds), typhus fever (Dorset), 

 whooping-cough (Fidlar), yellow fever (Dorset). Diseases caused by protozoa 

 (Todd) , Amcebic dysentery, entero-hepatitis of turkeys, African tick fever, relaps- 

 ing or recurrent fever, yaws, other spirochaetal diseases, syphilis, kala-azar, Delhi 

 boil, sleeping sickness, human trypanosomiases of South America, trypanosomiases, 

 of animals, coccidiosis of rabbits, white diarrhoea of chicks, malaria, red water, 

 miscellaneous protozoal diseases, pebrine, 



CHAPTER IV. CONTROL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES (Hill) 691 



Principles. Control of infectious disease practice. Disinfection. Carriage of infec- 

 tion by biological agents. 



